Browse archive by date:
  • Open Road Media in Deal with Albert Whitman; Adds More Mysteries

    Children's book publisher Albert Whitman & Co. has reached an agreement with Open Road Integrated Media to publish all 150 titles of Whitman's Boxcar Children Mysteries series in e-book format.

  • Frankfurt 2010: Our Digital Future with Evan Schnittman

    After eight years as vice president of corporate and business development at Oxford University Press, Evan Schnittman left in August to become Managing Director of Group Sales and Marketing, Print and Digital at Bloomsbury.

  • Univ. of Chicago Press Sticks with Giving Away E-books

    Through links on its Facebook page (The Chicago Manual of Style) and Twitter feed (@ChicagoManual), the University of Chicago Press continues to give away a free e-book each month. According to Garrett Kiely, UCP's director, the strategy was launched as a marketing vehicle to advertise its e-book list.

  • B&T in Pact to Offer Dutch, Flemish e-Books via Blio

    Baker & Taylor announced an agreement at the Frankfurt Book Fair with Dutch wholesaler Centraal Boekhuis to distribute Dutch and Flemish digital content on Blio, the newly released digital reading software developed by technologist Ray Kurzweil and his firm, KNFB Reading Technology.

  • Shambhala Titles to be Available on Espresso

    On Demand Books, creator of the Espresso Book Machine, and Shambhala Publications have entered into an agreement to distribute all of Shambhala's titles via Espresso. The agreement includes new and backlist titles from the publisher, which is known for books on Eastern thought, psychology, self-help, crafts, and parenting.

  • Sunday Press To Bring McCay's 'Little Nemo' to the iPad

    Launched in 2005 to produce full-size hardcover reprints of classic broadsheet newspaper comics strips, Sunday Press Books is now going digital. The specialty publishing house plans to offer Windsor McCay's Little Nemo in Slumberland along with a free mini-book preview, Little Nemo In Christmasland, as applications for the iPad in November.

  • Open Road Announces E-riginals Debut List

    Open Road Integrated Media has announced its first list of E-riginals--books that it will first publish as e-books and then as trade paperbacks. Four titles are on the first list in addition to Negotiating with Evil by Mitchell Reiss that was released September 7.

  • Shanower's Age of Bronze to Become Web Comic, iPad App

    Eric Shanower, creator of Age of Bronze, an award-winning series that retells the epic story of the Trojan War, is teaming up with literary web publisher Throwaway Horse, the online venture launched by the creators of Ulysses Seen, a web comic adaptation of James Joyce's Ulysses, to relaunch it as a color serialized web comic and application for the iPad.

  • Abdo Launches Digital Division

    Midwestern library and educational publisher Abdo has organized its digital publishing lines into Abdo Digital, a Web-based division that offers online access to e-book versions of Abdo print titles as well as new educational database products.

  • Reading in the Digital Age By the Numbers

    41: Percentage of parents who say increased use of digital devices has reduced their child's time reading for fun
    39: Percentage of 9–17-year-olds who believe online information is always correct
    25: Percentage of 9–17-year-olds who believe texting constitutes reading
    25: Percentage of 6–17-year-olds who have read a book on a digital device

  • Agents, Publishers, Others Talk Digital Royalties and Strategy at PW Panel

    At PW’s panel on e-book rights Tuesday morning at Random House, questions swirled about digital royalty rates and the place of traditional publishers in a fast-digitizing book market. While panelist Neil DeYoung, director of digital media for Hachette, and the only panelist representing a big six publisher, asserted repeatedly that the creation of digital books is a costly one for houses. Other panelists, including copyright attorney Lloyd Jassin and executive director for the Authors Guild Paul Aiken, contested that notion with questions and, at one point, a little math.

  • Rosetta Books Announces New Higher E-Book Royalty Rate

    E-book publisher Rosetta Books announced what it calls the “highest industry standard e-book royalty rate” yesterday. The new royalty terms give Rosetta authors 50% of net receipts on the first 2,500 copies of the e-books sold, followed by 60% of receipts for subsequent copies.

  • Ingram Launches VitalSource App for Apple Devices

    Today Ingram announced the launch of VitalSource Bookshelf, an iOS (iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch) app for its VitalSource program, which enables access to digital textbooks for academic institutions and students.

  • Zinio Wants Visual Digital Books

    Best known as a digital newsstand offering tens of thousands of magazines, Zinio, the San Francisco digital content aggregator, is stepping up its profile in the digital book market, adding a host of new trade book publishers.

  • E-book Publishers (Mostly) Sticking To Splitting Profits

    Now that e-books appear here to stay, the idea of publishing e-book originals, or digital-only editions of out-of-print books, no longer seems so strange. In fact, lots of publishers are trying it, from high-profile operations like Open Road Integrated Media to lesser-known enterprises like agent Scott Waxman's Diversion Books.

  • Idea Book: Steven Johnson

    E-books have found themselves a passionate and articulate champion in Steven Johnson, the bestselling author of Everything Bad Is Good for You, The Ghost Map, and The Invention of Air.

  • DNAML to Auction eBook.com Domain Name

    DNAML, an e-book technology developer and e-book distributor, has announced plans to sell the domain name eBook.com. The San Francisco investment bank Viant Capital, LLC, will manage the auction process for ebook.com. According to DNAML, over the last year the site has provided nearly five million e-book downloads of the 12,000 e-book titles it offers.

  • Blio e-Reading Software Set For Release September 28

    It looks like the release of Blio, the much anticipated e-book reading software developed by technologist Ray Kurzweil, is getting close. In partnership with Baker & Tayor, Kurzweil's firm KNFB Reading Technology says the free e-book reading software will be available for download beginning September 28.

  • Dynamic Books, College Open Textbooks in Pact to Offer Affordable Textbooks

    Dynamic Books, a publishing platform and line of customizable digital textbooks from Macmillan, announced an agreement with College Open Textbooks to identify quality public domain or open licensed textbooks that can be integrated into the Dynamic Books platform. College Open Textbooks has identified 27 open textbooks on a variety of academic subjects that will be made available through Dynamic Books beginning in January 2011 for a fee of $20 per student per term.

  • Komikwerks Adds New Actionopolis Series Via Kindle E-books

    Komikwerks, an online comics site and digital comics provider, is expanding its line of Actionopolis adventure novels aimed at young people with a list of 16 new series delivered through the Kindle e-book platform and available for Kindle on iPad, iPhone, PC, Mac, Blackberry, or Android device.

X
Stay ahead with
Tip Sheet!
Free newsletter: the hottest new books, features and more
X
X
Email Address

Password

Log In Forgot Password

Premium online access is only available to PW subscribers. If you have an active subscription and need to set up or change your password, please click here.

New to PW? To set up immediate access, click here.

NOTE: If you had a previous PW subscription, click here to reactivate your immediate access. PW site license members have access to PW’s subscriber-only website content. If working at an office location and you are not "logged in", simply close and relaunch your preferred browser. For off-site access, click here. To find out more about PW’s site license subscription options, please email Mike Popalardo at: mike@nextstepsmarketing.com.

To subscribe: click here.